Strength of Schedule is calculated from the opponents projected fantasy points allowed for the RB position. The easiest rating is 1 which gives the player the advantage against the defense and indicates an easy opponent, the most difficult rating is 10 which gives the defense the advantage and indicates a tough opponent.

Forte has struggled the past three games, but he will be hard to sit Week 14 against the San Francisco rushing defense who gave up 3 rushing touchdowns and 117 rushing yards to the Bears Jordan Howard in Week 13. With Bryce Petty getting the start, expect the Jets to lean on their ground game no matter the score.

A lot of pundits are comparing the move of Forte from the Bears to the Jets as similar to Frank Gore's move from the Bay Area to Indianapolis in 2015. For those not paying attention, that is not a particularly flattering comparison; Gore struggled mightily to gain traction in the Colts backfield, further proving the adage that running backs whose age are on the wrong side of 30 cannot succeed on a new team. But Forte, in many ways, is not Frank Gore. Forte is a durable, multi-skilled back who has made a career of avoiding big hits and injuries. Forte seems to slot in nicely with the Jets offense, providing a versatility that previous thumpers in the NY backfield (looking at you Chris Ivory) never had. Chan Gailey's offense has always been kind to the receiving running back, and even with the brick-handed Ivory around last year, Jets' running backs still received 125 targets. Forte should gobble up the majority of these in 2016, and provide solid RB2 numbers all year, with an explosively high RB1 ceiling in PPR leagues. Don't overspend, but don't overlook either.